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WIGHT HOLLOW

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Raymond S. G. Foster

High Elder Warlock

Power Poster

Wights, fairy rings, and trespass narratives


Wights, fairy rings, and trespass narratives


In older Germanic and English folklore, “wights” serves as a broad term—Old English wiht simply meant “being” or “creature,” because the base word is "life" from "vi/ve/fe/wi, etc." as occurs in the word vital as an example, and it could refer to anything from land-spirits to any kind of ambiguous otherworldly presences tied to specific places.


It is also this base sense why Vé may be applied in the sense of a place of power, like a reservoir that this force or presence is amplified and considered a natural gathering place of wights, or for lack of betters words in a more general sense, spirits, including ghosts of relatives. A lot will have to be unpacked here to understand the significance of all this.


The Concept of Sacred Spaces


  1. Ancient customs often including constructing a structure called a Hof at such a Vé, which itself…


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Raymond S. G. Foster

High Elder Warlock

Power Poster

This page is a collaborative platform for members to document and catalog the full spectrum of wights across historical, cultural, folklore and mythological contexts. By utilizing the original definition of wiht—meaning any living creature, spirit, or supernatural being—this database categorizes diverse entities ranging from Anglo-Saxon fairies to Old Norse vættir.

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